Note:This course is designed to be used by both lecture students and internet students. Though textbooks are available at the bookstore (see below) all readings are available online. This requires you to have a reliable internet connection. Talk to me if this poses problems for you. Also be sure to let me know if links no longer work.
Also Note: I do not use WebCT, so you dont have to worry about logging into that site.
Course Description: This is the second of the two required classes designed to familiarize you with the nature of national state and local government. This section focuses primarily on the institutions established in the U.S. and Texas Constitutions, as well as local city charters. We will look indepth at the nature of legislative, executive and judicial power as well as the relationships that exist between them. We will look at all aspects of these institutions, including the history behind each, their constitutional design, the internal organization and current issues associated with them. We will attempt to spend equal amouns of time looking at the national, state, and local institutions.
Readings: All of the readings in this class are available online. Look at the calendar below and you will notice a variety of subjects listed next to dates. Click on the appropriate subject and you will be taken to a separate page that will contain some basic text, plus a variety of links taking you to additional information about the subject matter. You will also see a variety of study guide questions and the appropriate assignment, which will vary depending on whether you are a lecture or online student.
You'll notice that I often link to Wikipedia pages, the open-sourced web based encyclopedia. Wikipedia is often criticized as being unreliable and subject to manipulation. In some cases entries are edited by people who wish to bias the information contained in the article for self interested reasons. In some cases this is true, but the site has become increasingly reliable, especially with relatively non-controversial or hisltorical topics. I have found the range of articles available to be impressive. There is easily accessible information available there, that simply cannot be found elsewhere. I have found it to be very useful for my purposes. Perhaps its best feature is that it records all edits and allows for discussions of controveries associated with how subjects are discussed. Here are some links that touch on controversies associated with Wikipedia:
Most of the material you are required to read in this class is either in this wiki, or in a link I direct you to. I also also have available two textbooks that I recommend you purchase in order to fill any gaps I might have in these pages. These are:
Lowi, Theodore, Benjamin Ginsberg and Kenneth Shepsle. American Government. 10th Edition. New York: W.W. Norton.
Brown, Lyle et al. Practicing Texas Politics. 13th Edition. Boston: Houghton Mifflin.
You will notice that I also maintain a blog where I post, more or less, daily items pertaining to the subject matter of the class. I want you to go to the page and subscribe to it. That way you will be able to recive information regarding not only what we will cover in the class, but also notices about the class itself.
Grading: A = 89.5 - 100; B = 79.5 - 89.5; C = 69.5 - 79.5; D = 59.5 - 69.5; F 59.5 - 0
Your grade will be based on the following:
Weekly Quizes and/or Written Assignments (60%)
Cumulative Final (20%)
Paper #1: (10%)
Paper #2: (10%)
Weekly Quizes and/or Written Assignments: Lecture students will have a quiz, almost always a series of multiple choice questions, every Monday on the material covered the previous week. You must come to class with a scantron. I will not provide one to you. Unless you make arrangements ahead of time (by email, so we have a record) I will not give make-ups. If you are an internet student, each week you are assigned four short answer questions The due dates for each are listed below. These quizes and written assignments are meant not only to evaluate your understanding of the material but to give me an idea about how well I am communicating it.
Cumulative Final: On the last day of class I will give you a cumulative exam which will cover the range of material we covered in the previous lectures.
Paper #1: Who Represents Me? How? One of the tasks of this class will be to familiarize you with the complex, decentralized nature of American governing system. In a federal system we are represented in the legislatures of several layers of government from the national (two Senators, and a member of the House of Representative), to the state (one Senator and One member of the House of Representatives) down to the local (city council, State Board of Education, independent school districts, etc...). Using your home address, I want you to discover how many people represent you at different levels of government and what specific things they to to represent your interests (assuming they do of course). Use the following website as a starting point: http://www.fyi.legis.state.tx.us/. You will find some, but not all of your representatives. I want you to use available online resources to discover the rest. Depending on where you live, you might find yourself in a navigation or community college district or not. When you locate these people, find out how much information is avaliable about them, national and state representatives will have the most. Investigate what their priorities are and whether there is some similarity with the positions taken from top to bottom.
I want you to write at least 1000 words on this subject and email it to me by midnight Sunday, September 27th.
Paper #2: The Obama Administration has had an ambitious agenda, probably the most ambitious since Lyndon Johnson's. Despite the increased influence the executive branch has had over the legislative process in the past several decades (since FDR's Administration), the legislative branch still makes the laws. The White House has to develop effective techniques to convince Congress to pass legislation it supports. I want you to select a law that has either been passed, or is being considered in Congress currently and review news items about it that detail how the White House has attempted to convince Congress to pass the law. It would be helpful to begin by familiarizing yourself with the personnel in the White House that handle Congressional relations.
- White House: Office of Public Engagement.
- Congress.org - Current Legislation.
- OpenCongress.org - Bills.
- OpenCRS.org.
I want you to write at least 1000 words on this subject and email it to me by midnight Sunday, December 6th.
Student Behavior: You are adults and will be expected to act accordingly. This is true whether you are in my lecture or online classes. Lecture students, do not sleep or engage in idle chatter in the classroom. Unruly students will be asked to leave. I encourage active discussion, so be prepared to state your opinions and justify them. I also expect you to come to class prepared to discuss the material at hand. Be ready to be called on at any moment to answer questions about the subject matter. Online students, I expect you to do your own work. This means that you will not ask anyone else to write papers for you, or you will not simply copy text from various sources and tell me you did it. Among the Founders, proper behavior was considered to be a necessary mark of a civilized person and a requirement for political participation. Read through Washington's Rules for Civility and Decent Behavior are a great example. Consider adopting a few.
Please Note: If you have any disabilities or other special needs that will affect your ability to learn in this class, please inform me of them. Appropriate steps will be taken to make reasonable accomodations and assist you with your needs.
Scholastic Dishonesty: If you cheat in any way in this class and are caught, you will fail the course. Do not download items from the internet and pass them off as your own.
The links below will take you to the readings and assignments for each week.
Calendar:
Week One (August 24 - 28)
- Introduction Lecture Student's Quiz on August 31
Online Student's Written Work due: August 30
Week Two (August 31 - September 4)
- The Legislature: Historical Background. Due to Labor Day, you will be tested on week two and week three together on September 14 or 15.
Online Student's Written Work must be sent to me by midnight: September 7
Week Three (September 7 - 11)
- The Legislature: Constitutional Design. Lecture Student's Quiz on September 14 or 15
Online Student's Written Work must be sent to me by midnight: September 14
Week Four (September 14 - 18)
- The Legislature: Evolution and Current Organization. Lecture Student's Quiz on September 21 or 22
Online Student's Written Work must be sent to me by midnight: September 21
Week Five (September 21 - 25)
- The Legislature: Contemporary Issues. (For Lecture Students)
- The Legislature: Budgeting. (For Online Students) Lecture Student's Quiz on September 28 or 29
Online Student's Written Work must be sent to me by midnight: September 28
Week Six (September 28 - October 2)
- The Executive: Historical Background. Lecture Student's Quiz on October 5 or 6
Online Student's Written Work must be sent to me by midnight: October 5
Week Seven (October 5 - 9)
- The Executive: Constitutional Design. Lecture Student's Quiz on October 12 or 13
Online Student's Written Work must be sent to me by midnight: October 12
Week Eight (October 12 - 16)
- The Executive: Current Organization. Lecture Student's Quiz on October 19 or 20
Online Student's Written Work must be sent to me by midnight: October 19
Week Nine (October 19 - 23)
- The Executive: Contemporary Issues. (Note: I want my online students to take a week off. You will not have to complete any assignments from this section) Lecture Student's Quiz on October 26 or 27
Week Ten (October 26 - 30)
- The Judiciary: Historical Background. Lecture Student's Quiz on November 2 or 3
Online Student's Written Work must be sent to me by midnight: November 2
Week Eleven (November 2 - 6)
- The Judiciary: Constitutional Design. Lecture Student's Quiz on November 9 or 10
Online Student's Written Work must be sent to me by midnight: November 9
Week Twelve (November 9 - 13)
- The Judiciary: Current Organization and Personel. Lecture Student's Quiz on November 16 or 17
Online Student's Written Work must be sent to me by midnight: November 16
Week Thirteen (November 16 - 20)
- The Judiciary: Contemporary Issues. Lecture Student's Quiz on November 23 or 24
Online Student's Written Work must be sent to me by midnight: November 23
Week Fourteen and Fifteen (November 23 - December 4)
- Public Policy. This section has been cancelled for my lecture students
Online Student's Written Work must be sent to me by midnight: December 3
Kevin Jefferies
Office: D-225
Office Phone: 281-756-3736
email: **kjefferies@alvincollege.edu**
class blog: **http://theweakerparty.blogspot.com/**
GOVT 2302 - 01
GOVT 2302 - 03
GOVT 2302 - 05
GOVT 2302 - IN2
Note: This course is designed to be used by both lecture students and internet students. Though textbooks are available at the bookstore (see below) all readings are available online. This requires you to have a reliable internet connection. Talk to me if this poses problems for you. Also be sure to let me know if links no longer work.
Also Note: I do not use WebCT, so you dont have to worry about logging into that site.
Course Description: This is the second of the two required classes designed to familiarize you with the nature of national state and local government. This section focuses primarily on the institutions established in the U.S. and Texas Constitutions, as well as local city charters. We will look indepth at the nature of legislative, executive and judicial power as well as the relationships that exist between them. We will look at all aspects of these institutions, including the history behind each, their constitutional design, the internal organization and current issues associated with them. We will attempt to spend equal amouns of time looking at the national, state, and local institutions.
Readings: All of the readings in this class are available online. Look at the calendar below and you will notice a variety of subjects listed next to dates. Click on the appropriate subject and you will be taken to a separate page that will contain some basic text, plus a variety of links taking you to additional information about the subject matter. You will also see a variety of study guide questions and the appropriate assignment, which will vary depending on whether you are a lecture or online student.
You'll notice that I often link to Wikipedia pages, the open-sourced web based encyclopedia. Wikipedia is often criticized as being unreliable and subject to manipulation. In some cases entries are edited by people who wish to bias the information contained in the article for self interested reasons. In some cases this is true, but the site has become increasingly reliable, especially with relatively non-controversial or hisltorical topics. I have found the range of articles available to be impressive. There is easily accessible information available there, that simply cannot be found elsewhere. I have found it to be very useful for my purposes. Perhaps its best feature is that it records all edits and allows for discussions of controveries associated with how subjects are discussed. Here are some links that touch on controversies associated with Wikipedia:
- Dean's World.
- EDUCAUSE.
- Reliability of Wikipedia, from Wikipedia itself.
Most of the material you are required to read in this class is either in this wiki, or in a link I direct you to. I also also have available two textbooks that I recommend you purchase in order to fill any gaps I might have in these pages. These are:
Lowi, Theodore, Benjamin Ginsberg and Kenneth Shepsle. American Government. 10th Edition. New York: W.W. Norton.
Brown, Lyle et al. Practicing Texas Politics. 13th Edition. Boston: Houghton Mifflin.
You will notice that I also maintain a blog where I post, more or less, daily items pertaining to the subject matter of the class. I want you to go to the page and subscribe to it. That way you will be able to recive information regarding not only what we will cover in the class, but also notices about the class itself.
Grading: A = 89.5 - 100; B = 79.5 - 89.5; C = 69.5 - 79.5; D = 59.5 - 69.5; F 59.5 - 0
Your grade will be based on the following:
Weekly Quizes and/or Written Assignments (60%)
Cumulative Final (20%)
Paper #1: (10%)
Paper #2: (10%)
Weekly Quizes and/or Written Assignments: Lecture students will have a quiz, almost always a series of multiple choice questions, every Monday on the material covered the previous week. You must come to class with a scantron. I will not provide one to you. Unless you make arrangements ahead of time (by email, so we have a record) I will not give make-ups. If you are an internet student, each week you are assigned four short answer questions The due dates for each are listed below. These quizes and written assignments are meant not only to evaluate your understanding of the material but to give me an idea about how well I am communicating it.
Cumulative Final: On the last day of class I will give you a cumulative exam which will cover the range of material we covered in the previous lectures.
Paper #1: Who Represents Me? How? One of the tasks of this class will be to familiarize you with the complex, decentralized nature of American governing system. In a federal system we are represented in the legislatures of several layers of government from the national (two Senators, and a member of the House of Representative), to the state (one Senator and One member of the House of Representatives) down to the local (city council, State Board of Education, independent school districts, etc...). Using your home address, I want you to discover how many people represent you at different levels of government and what specific things they to to represent your interests (assuming they do of course). Use the following website as a starting point: http://www.fyi.legis.state.tx.us/. You will find some, but not all of your representatives. I want you to use available online resources to discover the rest. Depending on where you live, you might find yourself in a navigation or community college district or not. When you locate these people, find out how much information is avaliable about them, national and state representatives will have the most. Investigate what their priorities are and whether there is some similarity with the positions taken from top to bottom.
I want you to write at least 1000 words on this subject and email it to me by midnight Sunday, September 27th.
Paper #2: The Obama Administration has had an ambitious agenda, probably the most ambitious since Lyndon Johnson's. Despite the increased influence the executive branch has had over the legislative process in the past several decades (since FDR's Administration), the legislative branch still makes the laws. The White House has to develop effective techniques to convince Congress to pass legislation it supports. I want you to select a law that has either been passed, or is being considered in Congress currently and review news items about it that detail how the White House has attempted to convince Congress to pass the law. It would be helpful to begin by familiarizing yourself with the personnel in the White House that handle Congressional relations.
- White House: Office of Public Engagement.
- Congress.org - Current Legislation.
- OpenCongress.org - Bills.
- OpenCRS.org.
I want you to write at least 1000 words on this subject and email it to me by midnight Sunday, December 6th.
Student Behavior: You are adults and will be expected to act accordingly. This is true whether you are in my lecture or online classes. Lecture students, do not sleep or engage in idle chatter in the classroom. Unruly students will be asked to leave. I encourage active discussion, so be prepared to state your opinions and justify them. I also expect you to come to class prepared to discuss the material at hand. Be ready to be called on at any moment to answer questions about the subject matter. Online students, I expect you to do your own work. This means that you will not ask anyone else to write papers for you, or you will not simply copy text from various sources and tell me you did it. Among the Founders, proper behavior was considered to be a necessary mark of a civilized person and a requirement for political participation. Read through Washington's Rules for Civility and Decent Behavior are a great example. Consider adopting a few.
Please Note: If you have any disabilities or other special needs that will affect your ability to learn in this class, please inform me of them. Appropriate steps will be taken to make reasonable accomodations and assist you with your needs.
Scholastic Dishonesty: If you cheat in any way in this class and are caught, you will fail the course. Do not download items from the internet and pass them off as your own.
The links below will take you to the readings and assignments for each week.
Calendar:
Week One (August 24 - 28)
- Introduction
Lecture Student's Quiz on August 31
Online Student's Written Work due: August 30
Week Two (August 31 - September 4)
- The Legislature: Historical Background.
Due to Labor Day, you will be tested on week two and week three together on September 14 or 15.
Online Student's Written Work must be sent to me by midnight: September 7
Week Three (September 7 - 11)
- The Legislature: Constitutional Design.
Lecture Student's Quiz on September 14 or 15
Online Student's Written Work must be sent to me by midnight: September 14
Week Four (September 14 - 18)
- The Legislature: Evolution and Current Organization.
Lecture Student's Quiz on September 21 or 22
Online Student's Written Work must be sent to me by midnight: September 21
Week Five (September 21 - 25)
- The Legislature: Contemporary Issues. (For Lecture Students)
- The Legislature: Budgeting. (For Online Students)
Lecture Student's Quiz on September 28 or 29
Online Student's Written Work must be sent to me by midnight: September 28
Week Six (September 28 - October 2)
- The Executive: Historical Background.
Lecture Student's Quiz on October 5 or 6
Online Student's Written Work must be sent to me by midnight: October 5
Week Seven (October 5 - 9)
- The Executive: Constitutional Design.
Lecture Student's Quiz on October 12 or 13
Online Student's Written Work must be sent to me by midnight: October 12
Week Eight (October 12 - 16)
- The Executive: Current Organization.
Lecture Student's Quiz on October 19 or 20
Online Student's Written Work must be sent to me by midnight: October 19
Week Nine (October 19 - 23)
- The Executive: Contemporary Issues. (Note: I want my online students to take a week off. You will not have to complete any assignments from this section)
Lecture Student's Quiz on October 26 or 27
Week Ten (October 26 - 30)
- The Judiciary: Historical Background.
Lecture Student's Quiz on November 2 or 3
Online Student's Written Work must be sent to me by midnight: November 2
Week Eleven (November 2 - 6)
- The Judiciary: Constitutional Design.
Lecture Student's Quiz on November 9 or 10
Online Student's Written Work must be sent to me by midnight: November 9
Week Twelve (November 9 - 13)
- The Judiciary: Current Organization and Personel.
Lecture Student's Quiz on November 16 or 17
Online Student's Written Work must be sent to me by midnight: November 16
Week Thirteen (November 16 - 20)
- The Judiciary: Contemporary Issues.
Lecture Student's Quiz on November 23 or 24
Online Student's Written Work must be sent to me by midnight: November 23
Week Fourteen and Fifteen (November 23 - December 4)
- Public Policy.
This section has been cancelled for my lecture students
Online Student's Written Work must be sent to me by midnight: December 3
Final Questions for my 2302 online classes are posted here.
The answers are due by midnight December 10th.